Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Taxpayers Bore Cost Of Inefficient Health Data System That Needs Review: Audit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2015 02:07 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says the province's $115-million public health data system is "riddled with deficiencies" and the technology may already be outdated.
     
    Carol Bellringer says the system, called Panorama, has been defective from the start, burdensome to use and needs ongoing maintenance at a cost of $14 million a year.
     
    Panorama was implemented after the SARS outbreak in 2003, when an independent review recommended that Canada invest in a public health system.
     
    Bellringer says it was expected to improve management of communicable disease outbreaks and immunization programs across the country but Panaroma was five years late in B.C., compared to other jurisdictions.
     
    She's also concerned that taxpayers bore the financial risk when the Health Ministry renegotiated a contract with IBM after it failed to deliver on its original terms.
     
    Bellringer is calling for an independent review to assess the ongoing suitability of Panorama, but Health Minister Terry Lake says a review is already underway and the project won't be scrapped.
     
    Lake says that while Panaroma isn't perfect, health experts agree it's the best system to track data across the province.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial
    A man accused of murdering his uncle muttered to himself repeatedly and turned often to stare at people in a B.C. courtroom as details of a grisly killing were revealed.

    B.C. Man Accused Of Killing Uncle Says His Mental Health Not Issue At Trial

    American Blogger's Rape Comments Have 'No Place' In Toronto: Mayor John Tory

    Toronto's mayor is calling for the cancellation of a show by an American blogger who says rape should be legalized on private property.

    American Blogger's Rape Comments Have 'No Place' In Toronto: Mayor John Tory

    Amanda Lindhout, Canadian Survivor Of Somalia Hostage-Taking, Helps Girl Who Survived Brutal Attack

    WINNIPEG — A freelance journalist who was kidnapped in Somalia has joined the growing list of Canadians stepping forward to help out a Manitoba girl who survived a vicious attack of her own.

    Amanda Lindhout, Canadian Survivor Of Somalia Hostage-Taking, Helps Girl Who Survived Brutal Attack

    Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.

    Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Soggy conditions across north-central British Columbia have allowed the Ministry of Forests to immediately scrap bans on open burning in the Prince George and northwest fire centres.

    Open Burning Ban Lifted As Cool, Wet Weather Quenches Northern Half Of B.C.

    CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July

    CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July
    OTTAWA — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says the pace of new home construction slowed in July for the first time in three months, mostly as a result of fewer multi-unit projects started in urban areas.

    CMHC: Slowdown In National Seasonal Rate Of New-Home Construction In July

    Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops

    Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Stabbing a store employee with a dirty needle has netted a Kamloops, B.C., man with hepatitis C more than two years in prison.

    Hepatitis C Man Gets Prison Sentence For Stabbing Store Employee With Needle In Kamloops